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In your post, you raise the very real issue of technological obsolescence, and its implications for long-term preservation of and access to digital records, in your musings about the paperless office question. This is an issue that has exercised the minds of information professionals for at least the last decade, if not longer. Software and hardware have changed so rapidly in that time that we must all have personal examples of electronic files created in long-dead programs that can no longer be read, and therefore are effectively lost.
However, I think that the work that has been done over the past years on this question has begun to find possible models or solutions for long-term digital preservation. System emulation, which you mention in your post, is only one solution method that has been explored, and a contentious one at that (to see the different viewpoints at a glance, refer to the contents of Jeff Rothenberg's book, "Avoiding the Technological Quicksand", http://www.clir.org/pubs/reports/rothenberg/contents.html, and David Bearman's response to it, "Reality and Chimeras in the Preservation of Electronic Records", http://www.dlib.org/dlib/april99/bearman/04bearman.html).
Other work in the area has focused on migration solutions (translating the data to new systems, rather than sustaining aged technology or emulating it) and the development of standard electronic preservation formats. The use of standard formats for long-term preservation, if successful, addresses some of the concerns you raise - you will be able to view the record long-term, and it will look the same as the original object, because it will BE the original object. Most standards in this area have tended to focus on open-source, robust file formats that could be replicated from publicly available data in the event of software-makers ceasing to support them. The project on which I work, the Victorian Electronic Records Strategy, uses Adobe's PDF format as our long-term document format for that reason, but several other file formats (such as the image format, TIFF) serve the same purpose.
Of course, time alone will tell how stable any long-term formats really are, but there is good reason to suppose that a self-contained record, which possesses its own metadata (for example, in a standard language such as XML) and renders documents in open-source formats, will be accessible, readable and "sensible" well into the future. Certainly, it will outlast short-lived proprietary formats.
While I agree that the paperless office has not arrived, and is unlikely to arrive anytime soon, I do not see that as a reason to shy away from the questions posed by electronic records. It is not a viable solution to just keep printing everything to paper, ad infinitum - electronic records need to be given their own durability and integrity, and treated as the "originals" that they are.
Regards
Kathy Sinclair Victorian Electronic Records Strategy Project Manager Public Record Office Victoria www.prov.vic.gov.au/vers/
"Wick, Charles Harrison" <[log in to unmask]>@[log in to unmask]> on 05/02/2002 07:55:03 AM
Please respond to Records Management Program <[log in to unmask]>
Sent by: Records Management Program <[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask] cc: (bcc: Kathy Sinclair/DPC)
Subject: Re: Paperless office is now reality
I hate to be the one to bring up this old debate again. It is fascinating to think the paperless office is becoming a reality. Two years, I attended a conference in Edinburgh where the paperwork was completely automated, everything was handled via email or online applications. But you know its great that we no longer have to print everything out on paper, but there is a lingering sense that someday when a record manager goes back to does some research and can't find any paper-based documents that are still readable. I guess my big concern is whose going to be the one to either simulate an antiquated Windows-based PC system to keep our records accessible, or encapsulate a Pentium 4 so we can read documents as they would have appeared in their original state? I guess I'm just saying I think to see a 'paper trail' of activity, and would hate to see all of our information be lost in time.
Just my $.02,
C. Harrison Wick NEH Supervisor Indiana University
-----Original Message----- From: Larry Medina [mailto:[log in to unmask]] Sent: Monday, February 04, 2002 4:21 PM To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: Paperless office is now reality
A very interesting study and equally interesting situation presented by Roger on behalf of the King County Court System. A few questions about how certain aspects of this are being dealt with, seeing as this is actually in practice now and no longer in theory.
Please understand that this is NOT an attempt to throw water on a system that seems to be working, but rather a request for some additional information to clarify how this is being done.
>I was asked to find ways to use technology to deal with >the irresistible force of a growing mass of paper case filings and the >immovable object of finite storage space.
I'd have to assume from your description of this process that no backfile conversion is taking place, you elected to institute a "day forward" solution from the point the system was instituted. What is the retention requirement for these documents that were previously (or still, in some cases) maintained in hard copy format? And is any consideration being given to backfile conversion for the balance of the documents that exist in paper format only?
>I advocated imaging (something we >now have) and, from the mid-90s, I have advocated electronic documents as >better than images, which remain but pictures of hard copy.
So I understand your description of this, you're saying that a scanned image (either TIFF or PDF format?) is what represents the paper documents generated in the filing and proceedings related to superior court matters for the county now (with the exception of specific types of cases).
What DPI level are these scanned at and are the original documents analyzed prior to scanning to determine if differing thresholds need to be established for documents within a case file to ensure all images are equally as legible?
What is the process for ensuring the legibility and accuracy of the images? Is there a fixed sampling rate?
How is indexing of the images accomplished, and what is done for indexing when multiple copies of documents exist in a case file that are basically identical, but may carry some minute marginalia that makes them unique documents to ensure all of the contents are captured and one image doesn't overwrite the other because of the indexing being basically identical?
>We have an >electronic filing project in development; I am helping build standards for >XML for court filings.
Will citizens file electronically, or will there still be a paper process that is the lead-in to a case being filed?
If you're capturing in XML, are there any concerns for loss of the context of documents?
How are you dealing with authentication issues related to the signatures on documents, and if the process IS fully electronic, how will signatures and/or seals be addressed?
You mentioned you're developing standards, can you tell me what XML standard you're using as your basis?
>We have imaged all incoming filings in all cases opened since January 3, >2000. Images are accessed through a Web application using Internet Explorer >or other browsers. Access is restricted to be inside the King County >network; public users come to the Clerk's Office reading rooms. (External >public access to case records is under study here, as leaders weigh privacy >and access issues; once resolved for our state, we would presumably open our >system.)
So there seems to be a network of dedicated servers and machines authorized to access this information currently. Are all of the images housed on one system and if so, is access to the images serial or random?
How often are the servers backed up and in the event of a power or communications failure, how would the images be retrieved?
How large is the digital repository for 1/3/2000 to present?
What about ongoing cases... I'd assume the attorneys/prosecutors/public defenders are keeping paper copies of ongoing work, and until a matter is closed, they are remaining in paper form and then are subsequently imaged. What happens in a case where a matter is transferred from one attorney to another prior to it being resolved?
How are the electronic records (the filings) modified without destroying the integrity of the initial filing? What if a case related to a filing is changed from one crime to another, say from "possession with intent to sell" to "use of a controlled substance"? Do you re-image the new filing and how is it referenced to the original documents?
>We have also been imaging archived case files since 1997. We have >over 25 million images in our system today, adding up to 48,000 new pages >daily. We use ID and password access for sealed records and our system is >well protected against invasion.
What types of procedures are in place to ensure when individuals leave the service of the county their access is no longer valid? How is the court notified for example when an investigator, a prosecutor or public defender leaves and joins the private sector?
How do you address a case that has been transferred to another attorney after the records have been sealed? If they're tied to an ID and password, how do you subsequently grant access (or permissions) to another user?
>Users cannot not access the library of >records directly; they cannot alter nor damage the system or the records. >Duplicate images are made and the duplicate disks go to a different location >as a security backup.
So based on this description, it sounds as though the images are being captured on some type of optical media, either a CD ROM or DVD ROM. What is the program for migration of images and how is that budgeted for within a county court structure?
What is being done to capture documents of "like retention periods" on the same platter/disk to ensure retention and disposition of records is properly addressed?
Given the images cannot be altered, what happens if a matter is reopened and additional records are generated? How are they tied together for someone attempting to access all records related to a case?
What happens to the images of records when a matter transfers from county superior court to a State court? What if this takes place outside the 30 day window and the paper records have been destroyed?
>A learned lesson: The "record" is paperless, but the "office" doesn't have >to be, and that's okay!
Sounds as though the hybrid system you describe below doesn't support this statement.
>For a year and a half, we kept the case files in image and paper systems >while we worked with the court to settle on how the files would be managed >long term. There was concern by those who assumed we were trying to force >them to work with files paperlessly. We agreed early on that certain papers >should be retained in hard copy, as exceptions (aggravated murder cases, >wills, negotiable instruments are examples). It took longer to get agreement >to let go of paper file folders in addition to images. The burden on staff >in the interim was awful.
Is anything imaged to provide reference back to these cases where the records are kept in paper form? For example, if a matter is filed electronically, but the records are maintained in paper, is there some "pointer" telling someone where to gain access to the records?
>We came to recognize that the judicial officers wanted to be able to work >with hard copy whenever they wished. They really didn't care that the >official files would be electronic; they understood the advantages. We >agreed that any judicial officer could ask us for a hard copy printout of >anything, even a whole case file. The cost to provide printouts on demand is >so much less than it costs to keep all of the case files in hard copy. We >learned that copiers could be outfitted so they would serve as image >printers, producing copies from TIFF at photocopier speed! We finally >agreed, and now the hard copy after imaging goes out for destruction 30 days >or so later.
Is there any concern that generating hard copy of the electronic records on demand will result in new records being produced? Once a copy has been marked, it's no longer a copy, but instead, it becomes a new and different record that has it's own need to be captured and retained in accordance with some retention schedule. And it need to be tied back to the original records, as it's related to them... it can't just be "inserted into the file folder" any longer.
>The "record" is electronic, the images. The chain of custody, their being in >the clerk's predictable and protected system, makes them so, not the media >on which they are stored. Most of us wouldn't want to do all of our work >with documents from the screen. Willingness to provide hard copy copies on >demand recognizes it is very reasonable to want to have paper to work with. >The copies contain the same information as the record.
Okay, I follow you UP TO THIS POINT....
>However, the judicial >officer can now do what was forbidden when the paper file was the record, >they can mark and write on the papers as they please.
Which is exactly where the additional exposure comes into play... the RECORD is electronic, but once the copy has been printed and "they mark and write on the papers as they please", NEW RECORDS are generated which differ from the records they were printed from.
>The answer was a win-win-win-win... solution, the only kind worth pursuing.
I look forward to your response Roger, as I'm curious how some of these items are dealt with.
Larry
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